Category Archives: Indians

Second (annual?) Cleveland Indians Mean Tweets

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Well one thing hasn’t changed since last year’s first edition of Indians Mean Tweets – I can’t figure out how to embed the video. So here’s a link.

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Eeeeeeeeeesh.

I know he rubs some people the wrong way but I actually kind of like Mike Polk. He may be a little over the top sometimes but his Browns stuff is usually on point, and the video he did with Swish two springs ago was pretty damn hilarious.

That being said….no, no, a thousand times no for Mike Polk on Indians Mean Tweets. The whole point of this bit, the reason it’s so funny is to hear athletes and celebrities read things people say about them. They talk, we laugh. They don’t need an emcee as a middle man. It’s like the guy in the bathroom that offers to squirt soap into your hands or throw your trash away. Why? The only time I don’t really find Polk funny is when it seems like he’s trying too hard, and he’s at max effort for the entire 3 minutes here.

In his defense though, he wasn’t given much talent to work with. Kluber, Kipnis and Lonnie were the unquestioned stars of last year’s video. Nowhere to be found this year. The 2016 version is half as long and features 8 people to last year’s 25 (3 of which are brand new to the team.)

Last year (6 minutes)  – Tom Hamilton, Lonnie Chisenhall, David Murphy, Yan Gomes, Jim Rosenhaus, Scott Atchison, Cody Allen, Jason Kipnis, Brandon Moss, Carlos Santana, Nick Swisher, TJ House, Chris Antonetti, Terry Francona, Rick Manning, Matt Underwood, Corey Kluber, Zach McAllister, Carlos Carrasco, Mike Aviles, Sandy Alomar, Charles Nagy, Josh Tomlin, BOB UECKERMichael Brantley

This year (2 minutes and 43 seconds) – Mike Polk, Danny Salazar, Roberto Perez, Mike Napoli, TJ House, Cody Anderson, Joba Chamberlain, Tommy Hunter

Maybe this is good though. Hilarious video last year, no playoff appearance. Reverse jix?

Bonus Bob Uecker Hall of Fame induction speech because it’s funnier than both of these things and anything else you’ll watch today

Gary Barnidge wore a “Keep the Chief” shirt in Egypt. And I think that’s okay.

This article from SI about the organization Gary has toured with the past four off-seasons (American Football Without Barriers)  is a good primer for this blog.


 

If we’re not careful, Chief Wahoo is gonna put Punxsutawney Phil right out of a job in a couple years. No need for the little critter to predict spring when we can so it ourselves here in Cleveland. Every year, like clockwork, the anti-Wahoo activists grab their soap boxes down from the attic and buy new batteries for their megaphones right around when the Indians head out west to Arizona to get another season of Major League Baseball underway. The beginning of Spring Training and Chief Wahoo arguments seem to always coincide with each other (which is ironic because the logo is nowhere to be found at the complex they share with the Cincinnati Reds in Goodyear.) With so many “traditions unlike any other” here in Cleveland, arguing about our baseball team’s racist logo has got to be right up there.

That’s point #1 here. You kinda can’t deny that Wahoo is a little racist. It’s essentially the Washington Redskins logo without the name. Well, not essentially, it literally is. The cartoon depicts a Native American with red skin. In a vacuum, Wahoo is no different than blackface caricatures. I don’t think there’s any arguing that.

That being said, I love Chief Wahoo. Easy for me to say, I know. I’m a white kid with no Native American heritage. But growing up in the 90’s, the logo doesn’t represent anything other than great memories of my favorite team playing my favorite sport. Does wearing and supporting Chief Wahoo make me racist? Absolutely not. Our logo could be a dolphin, or a jar of peanut butter. We could be the Cleveland Jars of Peanut Butter, and if someone said they were going to make a peanut butter sandwich, I would say “just please don’t eat Brantley or Lindor.” The connection between the logo and what it actually represents has long ago been severed for me. Chief Wahoo doesn’t represent Native Americans. It represents Jim Thome.

Intent is another part of the conversation I think. Wahoo wasn’t created with the intent of disrespecting or making fun of or offending the Native American people. There have been pictures and designs created throughout history with malicious intent. This is most certainly not one of them. From Wahoo’s Wikipedia page:

“In 1947, Cleveland Indians owner Bill Veeck hired the J.F. Novak Company, designers of the patches worn by Clevelands police and firefighters, to create a new logo for his team. 17-year-old draftsman Walter Goldbach, an employee of the Novak Company, was asked to perform the job. Tasked with creating a mascot that “would convey a spirit of pure joy and unbridled enthusiasm”, he created a smiling Indian face with yellow skin and a prominent nose. Goldbach has said that he had difficulty “figuring out how to make an Indian look like a cartoon”, and that he was probably influenced by the cartoon style that was popular at the time.

A mascot that would “convey a spirit of pure joy and unbridled enthusiasm.” 60+ years have passed and what is and is not acceptable in society has evolved, but that original sentiment that Wahoo was created to embody will never change.

These are all arguments I use every spring when people ask me how I could like such a racist logo. That’s another thing, real quick. Me supporting Wahoo is me supporting my baseball team, it’s not me supporting racism against Native Americans. Logos don’t work like politicians. People who support a Presidential candidate support the whole thing, the good and the bad. You might not agree with the candidate on 100% of issues, but you get the whole package when you vote to put them in office. I support Chief Wahoo because I support the baseball team it represents. I support hitting more home runs, winning more games and making it to the World Series. I support the BASEBALL TEAM, one thing Wahoo represents. I don’t support racism, another thing some people argue it represents.

All that being said…if a Native American came up to me and told me that they’re offended by Wahoo, I would say you’re absolutely right and we should probably get rid of him. I can like him and think we should get rid of him at the same time. That’s allowed. As absurd as it seems to some of us to argue about a logo, it’s equally as maddening to some Native Americans whose ancestors suffered through some unspeakable things throughout history. I like the logo and the memories it represents, but those pale in comparison.

So this brings us to the point of the blog, Gary Barnidge wearing a “Keep the Chief” shirt while doing some work in Egypt this week. To me, this is a non issue. I wear that shirt all the time, I’m not racist, I’d understand if they got rid of it. I’m also not a Pro Bowl Tight End in the NFL doing international work that’s being well documented in the media, but as crazy as this sounds, I don’t think that changes anything. Would anyone be saying anything if the shirt had no writing inside of it? No. Does him liking a logo of a team that plays in a community he’s done a ton of work for make him a racist, or even a bad guy? No. What’s the issue here? Maybe he was just supporting a great local business in GV Art + Design. Maybe he wanted to wear something that the most possible people would connect with our city while he does all this great outreach all over the globe. Is there another logo that more people connect with Cleveland than Chief Wahoo? I’m not sure there is.

I can understand people being offended by Chief Wahoo. I can’t understand people being offended by a football player who has been great in our community wearing a tee shirt with Chief Wahoo on it.

and oh yeah….

 

 

 

KEEP THE CHIEF

Cleveland Indians baseball. 3:05 PM. Today.

https://twitter.com/MLBastian/status/704376906976620544

Today.

March 1st, 2016.

3:05 PM.

Goodyear Ballpark.

Sports Time Ohio.

WTAM 1100.

For the first time in one hundred and forty-nine days….

Your 2016 Cleveland Indians will lace up their cleats and take the field for the first time this afternoon against the Cincinnati Reds. On the first of March, it is indeed a day of firsts. We get our first look at the new uniforms. We get our first look at newcomers Rajai Davis and Joey Butler. But most importantly, we get our first look at that round white thing with red strings spinning through the air, and our first listen of the sound it makes when it meets lumber:

Sure, Josh Tomlin vs Jon Moscot isn’t quite the Corey Kluber vs David Price matchup we’ll get on April 4th in Cleveland. And yeah, that’s Michael Martinez out at second base and Erik Gonzalez at short, not Jason Kipnis and Frankie Lindor. But if, for some reason, you need more reasons to watch this afternoon other than the fact that freaking baseball is back, there’s plenty of those too:

  • Other Indians pitchers scheduled to throw on Tuesday: TJ House, Jarrett Grube, Felipe Paulino, Austin Adams, Shawn Morimando, Ross Detwiler and Adam Plutko.
    • House is the oft-forgotten caboose of our major-league ready starting pitching. His 2015 was hampered by a shoulder injury, but he’s apparently healthy after rehabbing in Goodyear and throwing in the Arizona Fall League. He’ll complete for the 5th spot in the rotation, although it seems like a lock he’ll start the season in Columbus.
    • I got a thing for hard throwers, so I got a thing for Austin Adams. His fastball sits in the upper 90’s and touched 100 multiple times last season in 28 appearances with the big club. He seems more likely than not to break camp and head to Cleveland.
    • Morimando and Plutko are talked about in the same group as Michael Clevinger and Ryan Merritt, young guys with big arms and pretty damn good minor league numbers. They have a combined 60.1 innings above AA Akron, all coming from Merritt and Clevinger. This paragraph of guys will be some of the main reinforcements for our big league staff until teenagers like Brady Aiken, Triston McKenzie and Justus Sheffield are ready down the road.
    • Detwiler is a southpaw who started seven games for the Rangers last season before a trip to the DL led to a demotion to the bullpen, an ERA above 7 and a designation for assignment. He’s only 29 years old though, and considering the alternatives when it comes to lefties in the pen (young, unproven Kyle Crockett and Giovanny Soto, veterans with spotty track records in Joe Thatcher and Tom Gorzelanny), he’s certainly in the mix of guys battling for a spot with the big league club.
    • Grube (34 years old) and Paulino (32) are journeymen veterans brought in for bullpen depth. Feel free to grab snacks and pee during these two innings.
  • Given Terry Francona’s traditional reluctance to play young guys over veterans with (perceived) similar talent levels in the past, Tyler Naquin may have been the odd man out of the Indians outfield…five days ago. Abraham Almonte getting popped with an 80-burger for PED use last Friday blew the center field church doors clean off the hinges. All bets are off at this point. Naquin was sniffing the big leagues last season, and probably would have been called up had it not been for an unfortunately-placed outfield wall & subsequent concussion. It’s basically him, Davis, Collin Cowgill and Joey Butler for the center and left field spots (barring a Jose Ramirez sighting in center, which I’m totally for.) You pretty much know what you’re going to get out of the last 3. Most baseball people a whole lot smarter than I am set Naquin’s ceiling at a big league 4th outfielder. That doesn’t sound so bad when there’s so many 5th and 6th’s around him. He’s probably the player I’ll be watching the closest all spring.

And for the first time on and Indians game day in 2016…

 

 

KEEP THE CHIEF